โฟ Universal Design for Learning
Designing learning that works for every student from the start โ not as an afterthought, a modification, or a bolt-on accommodation, but as the foundation of every lesson.
๐ Module Overview
Universal Design for Learning (UDL) emerged from architecture's universal design movement โ the insight that designing for people with disabilities typically produces better design for everyone (curb cuts, originally for wheelchair users, benefit cyclists, parents with strollers, elderly people). Applied to education, UDL proposes that designing for the full range of learner variability produces better learning for all students.
The alternative โ designing for a mythical "average" learner and then making modifications for individuals โ is both less effective and less efficient. In Aotearoa, where learner diversity is extraordinary, designing for the full range is not optional.
Teaching Council Standard 3: Teachers design for learning, which includes designing for diverse learners. The NZC's vision explicitly names a curriculum that "includes and engages every student." UDL is the most evidence-grounded framework for achieving this.
๐จ The Three UDL Principles (CAST Framework)
CAST (Center for Applied Special Technology) developed the UDL framework around three core questions that reflect how diverse learners engage, process, and express learning:
Multiple Means of Engagement
- Offer student choice and autonomy
- Provide relevance and authenticity
- Foster collaboration and community
- Develop self-regulation strategies
- Build in challenge at appropriate levels
Multiple Means of Representation
- Offer content in multiple formats (visual, audio, text)
- Build vocabulary and background knowledge
- Clarify language and symbols
- Use illustrations, diagrams, models
- Maximise transfer through multiple examples
Multiple Means of Action & Expression
- Offer varied ways to respond and navigate
- Use multiple tools and media
- Support planning and strategy development
- Scaffold and support to build independence
- Allow different forms of assessment
๐ณ๐ฟ UDL in the Aotearoa Context
In New Zealand, learner diversity includes cultural diversity, linguistic diversity, disability, and socioeconomic difference โ intersecting in complex ways. UDL applied through a Mฤori and Pasifika lens means designing for different ways of knowing as well as different ways of accessing content.
Multiple Languages
Many NZ students are learning in their second or third language. Multiple representation includes access to content in home languages where possible.
Oral Traditions
Mฤori and Pasifika knowledge systems privilege oral transmission and collective knowing. Design includes space for these forms alongside written text.
Practical & Hands-On
Mahi toi (arts) and practical knowledge are legitimate ways of knowing. Tasks that allow embodied, practical, and creative expression serve diverse learners.
Collective Over Individual
Cooperative and collective learning modes match the values of many Mฤori and Pasifika communities โ and have high effect sizes for all learners.
๐ฟ Disability Inclusion in NZ Schools
Aotearoa's Education and Training Act 2020 requires all students to receive education in their local school unless there are compelling reasons otherwise. This means mainstream teachers have students with learning support needs in every class, and are professionally obligated to design for their inclusion โ not outsource their learning to specialist staff.
โก Differentiation โ Not the Same as UDL
Differentiation and UDL are related but distinct. Differentiation typically involves modifying content, process, or product for individual students after a lesson design is complete. UDL designs from the start for the full range, reducing the need for individual modifications.
- Differentiation by content: Varying what students learn based on readiness, interest, or learning profile. Different texts at different reading levels; extension tasks for faster students.
- Differentiation by process: Varying how students engage with content โ some working through examples, others using manipulatives, others accessing video explanations.
- Differentiation by product: Varying how students demonstrate understanding โ written, oral, visual, practical. Assessment that doesn't constrain expression to one mode.
- Differentiation by environment: Varying the conditions for learning โ seating, noise level, sensory considerations, flexible grouping.
- UDL goes further: Rather than reacting to individual needs after design, UDL anticipates the full range of variability and builds flexible options in from the start.
๐๏ธ Inclusive Education โ A Values Commitment
Inclusive education is more than UDL and differentiation techniques โ it is a values statement about who belongs in mainstream classrooms and who deserves access to a rich, challenging curriculum. The evidence strongly supports inclusion: students with disabilities learn more in mainstream settings with appropriate support, and the presence of diverse learners enriches learning for all.
- Inclusion is not integration. Integration places students with disabilities in mainstream settings and expects them to adapt. Inclusion requires the setting to adapt to them.
- The problem is in design, not in students. When a student can't access learning, the curriculum or teaching approach has been designed without them in mind โ not because the student is incapable.
- Specialist staff are a resource, not a replacement. Learning support teachers, SENCO, OTs, and speech-language therapists provide expertise that mainstream teachers should draw on โ but the relationship and primary learning is the classroom teacher's responsibility.
- Learn your students' Learning Support plans. Individual Education Plans (IEPs) and Learning Support Coordination documentation exist for a reason. Read them, understand them, implement them.
๐ซ UDL in Practice โ Starting Points
Multiple Instructions
Always give instructions in at least two modes โ verbal and visible (on board/slide). Students who miss verbal instructions can still access the task.
Flexible Time
Build in buffer time for students who need more processing time. Speed of task completion is rarely the learning goal.
Resource Variety
Offer the same content through different media: text, video, audio, diagrams. Students choose what works for them โ this is autonomy, not pandering.
Expression Choice
Where possible, let students choose how they demonstrate understanding. The learning goal is the understanding โ not a specific format of proof.
Clear Goals
Clarify the learning intention, not the product format. Students with different abilities can reach the same conceptual destination via different paths.
Strengths-Based Framing
UDL only works in a classroom where difference is framed as variety, not deficit. Celebrate the multiple ways students understand the same idea.
๐ Connected Resources
Other Modules:
Mฤtauranga Mฤori Lens
Universal Design for Learning aligns deeply with mฤtauranga Mฤori values. Hauora โ holistic wellbeing across te taha tinana, hinengaro, wairua, and whฤnau โ mirrors UDL's commitment to the whole learner. Tikanga affirms that every learner deserves conditions where their mana is upheld and their diverse strengths are recognised. Kaitiakitanga calls teachers to be genuine guardians of every student's potential.
Puna Kลrero โ Sources
CAST. (2018). Universal Design for Learning Guidelines (version 2.2). Wakefield, MA: CAST.
Meyer, A., Rose, D. H., & Gordon, D. (2014). Universal Design for Learning: Theory and Practice. Wakefield, MA: CAST.
Ministry of Education New Zealand. (2011). Inclusive Education: Guidelines for Schools. Wellington: Ministry of Education.